Klavika is a flexible family of sans serifs for editorial and identity design. Features such as small caps, true italics, extended language support and multiple numeral styles make Klavika an ideal workhorse typeface.
by · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified May 19, 2024
This casually elegant typeface is based on an unnamed offering from Pen & Brush Lettering and Practical Alphabets, published by Blandford Press, Ltd., London, in 1929. Good taste dictates that, because of the ornate...
by · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified May 18, 2024
The model for this monocase typeface was issued in the early 1900s by Barnhart Brothers & Spindler with the rather prosaic name of Steelplate. A hundred years later, it still retains its currency (ouch!),...
by · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified December 28, 2022
This typeface derives both its style and its name from a logotype design for an eponymous magazine, executed in the 1940s by Catalán type designer Joan Trochut Blanchard, of Supertipo Veloz fame. Its strong...
by · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified May 18, 2024
The basic letterforms for this typeface were found on a 1920s French poster for Les Arts de Feu by an unnamed artist. The stark geometric forms have been dressed up with an outline treatment,...